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Best-Car-Care.com - Fix-A-Flat Tire Inflator with Hose 16 oz. Case of 6

Fix-A-Flat Tire Inflator with Hose 16 oz. Case of 6
List Price: $58.50
Our Price: $39.00
Your Save: $ 19.50 ( 33% )
Availability: N/A
Manufacturer: Fix-A-Flat
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5

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Brand: Fix-A-Flat
Label: Fix-A-Flat
Manufacturer: Fix-A-Flat
Publisher: Fix-A-Flat
Studio: Fix-A-Flat

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Editorial Reviews:

Buy it by the case and save! Regular price = $4.99 each. Case price = $4.00 each x 6. Fix-A-Flat the leading tire inflator in the industry is one of the easiest most convenient solutions to a flat tire. People who carry Fix-A-Flat know that they are carrying a product that can get them back on the road quickly and safely in a matter of minutes. No jacks or tools are required and the rubber compound in Fix-A-Flat provides a durable seal on most flats.


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5Average rating of 1/5
Summary: Garbage In A Can
Comment: This stuff is the absolute worst thing in the world you could do to a tire, especially one that's either flat or going flat. I've worked with tires for over 7 years and found so many people put this junk in their tire that has 3-inch gashes in the side, screws or broken bottle pieces in it, or ridden the thing flat for several miles. The crap is made from ammonia (however it's spelled) and simply doesn't work. You're basically pumping beer-foam in your tire, hoping (thinking) it'll close up any hole. But the truth is the junk just bubbles out and leaves a sticky mess everywhere. Then you take it to get fixed and it makes it such a hassle to clean out. Not that I'm supporting the dude who fixes the tire with this review, I just think the stuff is crap and would rather pump feces into the tire, or bubble gum, or oatmeal. Anything would be better than this stuff.

Bottom line: get yourself some good tools to change a spare and do that instead. This stuff is a waste of money and time.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: THIS 16 OZ. SIZE IS BEST FOR 13" TIRES -- I SUGGEST THE 20 OZ. CAN FOR AVERAGE SIZE TIRES
Comment: AFTER USING THIS PRODUCT TWICE -- NEXT TIME I WOULD PREFER TO ERROR ON THE SIDE OF MORE PRODUCT THAN NEEDED,

SEVERAL TIMES IN THE PAST YEAR I REALLY NEEDED THIS STUFF RATHER DESPERATELY ------ AND IT WORKED, BUT - - -

I did not really have quite enough product in the 16 oz. can that I got at Wal-Mart [this is the 20 oz. can offered here] to refill my leaking tire --that I had to do at the gas station some 6 miles away. In essence, the operation was a success, but I had to resuscitate the patient again at the gas station some 6 miles and a number of grey hairs down the road. If the can was only a tad bigger, it would have added enough air to go safely, rather than unsafely with about 2 psi of air pressure, to the gas station where we completely filled the tire with air. By the way, my tire size was 225/70-14, which requires a pretty large volume of air to fill, but no more than most vans and trucks and less than some. This 16 oz. can would have probably been enough for a small 13" tire, but I should warn you - that the same thing happened 6 years ago, on a 195/70-14 that was an oversized tire on my sons 1999 Toyota Corrolla, but I would be getting ahead of myself.

HERE'S OUR STORY -- IT ACTUALLY HAPPENED FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 22, 2006 in Southern Indiana



IN A NUTSHELL: GREAT PRODUCT - BUT THE 20 OZ. CAN IS PROBABLY THE SMALLEST YOU'LL NEED UNLESS YOU HAVE 13" TIRES


HERE'S THE TALE --

WHAT DO YOU DO WHEN IT'S RAINING & YOUR TIRE GOES FLAT IN WAL-MART'S PARKING LOT?

This happened to me last year and I was scared out of my wits. I had an hour to get home before my six-year-old son got off the school bus. I was 25 miles away and I just saw my rear tire and knew it had no air in it. I recalled using this product about 6 years earlier and that it worked, so I ran into Wal-Mart and skipped the items I had come shopping for and went straight to the automotive section to hunt for this stuff. Twenty minutes later, standing in the parking lot, I read the directions and realized that I had to try to find what was leaking and remove it if possible. After breaking a small screwdriver and bending a key for a car we sold 5 years ago, I managed to remove a nail that was about 4 inches long -- the trouble was that the rest of the air leaked out rather quickly once I pulled out the nail.

READ AND FOLLOW THE DIRECTIONS: PLEASE NOTE - WE ONLY HAD THE 16 OZ. CAN

The directions on the can stated that the valve stem had to be in the 8 o'clock position so I had my teenage daughter back the car up until the valve stem was at the 8 o'clock position. I shook the can for over 30 seconds as Angela timed me, then I screwed the hose attachment into the valve stem. It whooshed as a stream of white, foamy liquid rushed through the transparent tubing into the tire. I could hear air rushing in with it but then I recalled what had actually happened the last time I used this stuff about 6 years earlier.

You guessed it, the hole was towards the top of the tire and the foam never got there allowing the air to simply escape very nosily out the hole. Since the flat was in the rear of my front-drive Plymouth Voyager Minivan, I drove it to a gas station that I knew had air, about 6 miles away. I went about 25 mph and many people hailed me as they drove alongside to inform me that I had a flat tire.

BUT THEN SOMETHING GOOD HAPPENED

By the time I reached the Chevron Station with the air, still some 20 miles from our home, I was convinced that I had turned the flat tire into spaghetti and that we would miss the bus. Well, I am happy to report that this was not the case. From traveling slowly, the tire had circulated that white sealant foam and had heated up some due to the extra friction caused by running without air. I filled the tire up and to my surprise there was no sound of escaping air. The sealant held and I drove, at a somewhat reduced speed, the remaining 18-20 miles in about 38 minutes to get home about 2 minutes ahead of the bus.

BOTTOM LINE: HAVE AN AIR SOURCE NEARBY IF YOU PULL OUT THE NAIL

This stuff does work, but after you pull out a nail from your tire it may be rather difficult to get it to hold the air before it can circulate and heat up within the tire. This was my actual experience with this exact product today, and it is consistent with what happened 6 years earlier. In short, have an air supply lined-up when you insert the sealant as close as possible to where you remove the nail and insert the sealant. This will reduce the risk of running the tire flat and rendering it unserviceable. If you do this, you stand an excellent chance of executing a fast emergency repair that anybody can manage and, like me, you too might save the day.

[I AM NOT AFFILIATED WITH ANY PRODUCT OR COMPANY.]




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